Hayes v. Town of Cedar Grove

37 S.E.2d 450, 128 W. Va. 590, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 19
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1946
Docket9736
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 37 S.E.2d 450 (Hayes v. Town of Cedar Grove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayes v. Town of Cedar Grove, 37 S.E.2d 450, 128 W. Va. 590, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 19 (W. Va. 1946).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

In May, 1943, plaintiff, Wilburn Hayes, while employed by the defendant, Town'of Cedar Grove, a municipal corporation, was injured by falling from a truck being used in removing trash and garbage from the streets and premises adjacent thereto in said town. He thereafter instituted this action in the Circuit Court of Kanawha County, seeking to recover damages for such injury from the Town of Cedar Grove, basing his action upon alleged negligence in respect to the character of the truck so used, and the manner in which it was operated. In his declaration, he averred matters which this Court held showed that the enterprise in which the town was engaged, and from which plaintiff’s injury resulted, was in the exercise of a governmental function, and that the town was immune from liability by reason thereof. Hayes v. Town of Cedar Grove, 126 W. Va. 828, 30 S. E. 2d 726. That case was decided upon the certification of the action of the trial court in sustaining a demurrer to the declaration.

Upon remand of the case to the Circuit Court, it appears from the record at bar, and from our own records, that on September 27, 1944, plaintiff tendered his amended declaration and that said court sustained defendant’s demurrer to the declaration as amended. We refused to docket the certification of said ruling on October 30, 1944, and again on December 4,1944. The first amended declaration was based upon the same theory of recovery as that contained in the original declaration.

On January 10, 1945, plaintiff was permitted to file a second amended and substituted declaration, which contains some additional allegations, but still relies upon the allegations of negligence contained in the original and first amended declarations. On January 19, 1945, plaintiff appeared and moved the court to amend his *592 second amended-and substituted declaration by inserting, at appropriate points therein, the following language: “and to keep its streets where same was used in a reasonably safe condition”; and the language: “where the street was in a bumpy and unsafe condition”; and the further language: .“on. said bumpy and unsafe street”. The. quoted amendments were permitted to be made, and were interlined in the second amended and substituted declaration at points such as would, in effect, make the said declaration include a charge that the streets of said town were in an unsafe condition, and that the street at the point of the accident was in a bumpy and unsafe condition, thus alleging a cause of action under the provisions of Chapter 40, Acts of the Legislature, First Extraordinary Session, 1933, (Michie’s Code, 17-10-17). On the 24th day of February, 1945, the defendant, by its counsel, appeared and moved the court to strike from said amended and substituted declaration the language quoted above, on the ground that the insertion of said language created a new cause of action, which could not be set up by the amendment, which motion the court sustained. The defendant then filed its demurrer to the amended and substituted declaration, as deleted, on the ground that the same showed on its face that the alleged act of negligence of the defendant, which caused the injury of plaintiff, was committed by defendant in the exercise of a governmental function, and that defendant was immune from liability therefor. This is the same objection that was made to the original and first amended declarations, which objections, in the form of a demurrer, both the circuit court and this Court had sustained. The circuit court sustained said demurrer, and, the plaintiff not desiring further to amend, his action was dismissed, and this writ of error followed.

Our decision in Hayes v. Town of Cedar Grove, supra, settles the law of the case alleged in the original and the two amended declarations. Without the language quoted above, and stricken from the second amended and substituted declaration by the circuit court, there could be *593 no recovery by the. plaintiff. The declaration, as amended by the insertion of the language quoted above, might present a cause of action under said Chapter 40. The question is, therefore, whether a cause of action under Chapter 40 aforesaid can be set up by an amendment to the second amended and substituted declaration.

It is well settled in this State that an amendment to a pleading may not set up a new cause of action; but an amendment to a declaration which merely amplifies the allegations therein, with respect to the same cause of action, may be made. Section 12 of Chapter 125, Code, 1868, taken from the Virginia Code of 1860, provides that “The plaintiff may of right amend his declaration or bill at any time before the appearance of the defendant, or after such appearance if substantial justice will be promoted thereby. But if such amendment be made after the appearance of the defendant, the court may impose such terms upon the plaintiff as to a continuance of the cause, and the payment of costs of such continuance as it may deem just. * * In the reenactment of Chapter 125 by Chapter 71, Acts of the Legislature, 1882, the same language was used; and likewise in the amendment to Section 12 aforesaid, made by the Legislature, Chapter 41, Acts 1911, although in the latter enactment some changes are made in the section in other respects. Code, 56-4-24, provides: “Plaintiff may of right amend his declaration or bill at any time before the appearance of the defendant; and, notwithstanding such appearance, in any action, said motion or other proceeding the court, if in its opinion substantial justice will be promoted thereby, may, at any time, before final judgment or decree, and upon such terms as it may deem just, permit any pleading to be amended, or material supplemental matter to be set forth in amended or supplemental pleadings, introducing a necessary party, discontinuing as to a party, eliminating from a multifarious bill all but one of the equitable causes of action alleged, or changing the form but not the cause of-action, ***.” Under our present statute, a court may not permit an amendment to a *594 pleading which changes the cause of action, and in the revisers’ note it is stated that the language “but not the cause” was inserted for the purpose of emphasis and to conform to Court decisions.

We think it clear that our present statute fully conforms to our decisions on the point in question. That question was first considered by this Court in Snyder v. Harper, 24 W. Va. 206, wherein it was held:

“After the appearance of the defendant the court should be liberal in allowing such amendments to the declaration, as tend to promote the fair trial and determination of the subject-matter of controversy, upon which the action was originally really based; but no amendment should be allowed against the protest of the defendant, which introduces into the case a new substantive cause of action different from that declared upon and different from that, which the party intended to declare upon, when he brought his action, though the amendment be such, as would in another count have been properly inserted in the original declaration, and the new cause of action was such, as could, if the plaintiff had so chosen, been united in the same suit with the original cause of action actually sued upon.”

The same principle was followed in Lamb

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 S.E.2d 450, 128 W. Va. 590, 1946 W. Va. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-town-of-cedar-grove-wva-1946.